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Threshold, l'expérience finale

Original title: Threshold
  • 1981
  • PG
  • 1h 37m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
558
YOUR RATING
Threshold, l'expérience finale (1981)
DramaSci-Fi

In this gripping sci-fi drama, a celebrated heart surgeon (Donald Sutherland, "The Hunger Games") collaborates with an offbeat scientist (Jeff Goldblum, "Jurassic Park") to perform the first... Read allIn this gripping sci-fi drama, a celebrated heart surgeon (Donald Sutherland, "The Hunger Games") collaborates with an offbeat scientist (Jeff Goldblum, "Jurassic Park") to perform the first artificial heart transplant.In this gripping sci-fi drama, a celebrated heart surgeon (Donald Sutherland, "The Hunger Games") collaborates with an offbeat scientist (Jeff Goldblum, "Jurassic Park") to perform the first artificial heart transplant.

  • Director
    • Richard Pearce
  • Writer
    • James Salter
  • Stars
    • Donald Sutherland
    • John Marley
    • Sharon Acker
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    558
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Richard Pearce
    • Writer
      • James Salter
    • Stars
      • Donald Sutherland
      • John Marley
      • Sharon Acker
    • 15User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 8 nominations total

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    Top cast67

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    Donald Sutherland
    Donald Sutherland
    • Dr. Thomas Vrain
    John Marley
    John Marley
    • Edgar Fine
    Sharon Acker
    Sharon Acker
    • Tilla Vrain
    Mare Winningham
    Mare Winningham
    • Carol Severance
    Jeff Goldblum
    Jeff Goldblum
    • Dr. Aldo Gehring
    Michael Lerner
    Michael Lerner
    • Henry De Vici
    Julie Armstrong
    • Donna Clure
    Jun Asahina
    • Japanese Technician
    Steve Ballantine
    • Injured Motorcyclist
    Ralph Benmergui
    • Mr. Orantes' Interpreter
    • (as Ralph Benmurgui)
    Richard Blackburn
    • Dr. Cutter
    Lally Cadeau
    Lally Cadeau
    • Anita, Vrain's Secretary
    Eric Clavering
    • Old Man in Recovery
    James Douglas
    James Douglas
    • Older Doctor in X-Ray Room
    • (as James B. Douglas)
    Nancy Downey
    • Judy
    Valeria Elia
    • TV Announcer
    Jan Filips
    • Young Doctor in X-Ray Room
    Barry Flatman
    Barry Flatman
    • Reporter #1
    • Director
      • Richard Pearce
    • Writer
      • James Salter
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews15

    5.9558
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    Featured reviews

    9tdilts9219

    Recommend this movie as factually based.

    As near as I can tell, this movie is based directly on Dr. Denton Cooley's career. Dr. Cooley WAS the first doctor to use an artificial heart in a patient whose heart was unrepairable on the operating table. He was chastised for doing this at the time without approval and so he started his own hospital, The Texas Heart Institute. This movie closely follows the circumstance of that operation that transpired in the 1960's long before the first APPROVED artificial heart was used in Barney Clark in December of 1982. I remember the time well as I had to wait an extra day for Dr. Cooley to operate on me as he was delayed in getting back to Houston after Mr. Clarks operation. This is one movie based on closely related facts.
    7T-1000

    Absorbing and realistic

    I wasn't really looking forward to seeing this film, and only ended up watching it because it stars Donald Sutherland and Jeff Goldblum, two of Hollywood's most talented and inimitable actors.

    In the end, though, I glad I did watch it - THRESHOLD turned out to be an engaging and absorbing drama. It's a fictional account of the first ever artificial heart transplant, and feels so realistic that you'd never guess it was made two years before the artificial heart became a reality.

    Donald Sutherland's first-rate performance is probably the highlight of the movie - when he's this good, you wonder if there's anyone he couldn't act off the screen. A then unknown Jeff Goldblum holds his own admirably as the idealistic young doctor who invented the artificial heart, and the film features some impressive camerawork, most notably the opening tracking shot.

    All in all, it helps if you're a Sutherland fan, but it's not essential; this is one of those movies whose relaxed pace, absorbing atmosphere and strong performances will have you hooked right from the start.
    8planktonrules

    I wouldn't call this sci-fi.

    For some reason, this very good movie only has a paltry overall score of 5.9 at this time. It's especially odd since all the reviewers (so far) score the film higher...often quite a bit higher.

    "Threshold" is a great name for this movie. After all, it's about someone receiving the first artificial heart and only a year later, a primitive sort of artificial heart was implanted in a human. Because of this, I am not sure the term 'sci-fi' is appropriate. Instead, it's a film about what was about to become...though even to this day, such devices are only experimental.

    Dr. Vrain (Donald Sutherland) is one of the foremost heart surgeons in the world. He's an expert at transplants, though he's interested in possibly implanting an artificial heart in the future. So, when he meets a weird biologist (Jeff Goldblum) it appears such an operation might be completed.

    This film is not that farfetched and making such procedures seem possible is its great strength. Additionally, while I certainly am no surgeon, the surgeries you see look pretty realistic. However, some might balk at the path the film takes, as very soon after the surgery occurs, the story ends....and my wife hated this. She wanted to know more...though because this is unchartered territory I didn't mind the vague ending.

    Overall, some excellent acting and an absorbing story make this worth seeing.
    10ourilk

    One of the best unknown hit

    I am not the only viewer who believes that "Threshold," a very low key drama at first viewing, is outstanding film. One online review considered it one of a personal "unknown 'ten best.'" I watch it again and again, completely absorbed by the intense concentration with which Donald Sutherland plays Dr. Thomas Vrain, a highly skilled and dedicated cardiovascular surgeon. Vrain meets, and has his hospital retain the services of, an offbeat biologist, Aldo Gehring (Jeff Goldblum), who is pursing the invention of an artificial heart. Against all advice and straining medical ethics, Dr. Vrain performs a successful transplant of Gehring's artificial heart to save a patient with an otherwise hopeless congenital defect. "Threshold" is a meticulously crafted production with impeccable, nearly mesmerizing performances in the even most minor roles. Sutherland is at his best in this film, creating so realistic a portrait of a brilliant surgeon that one physician reviewer on this site claimed to recognize several surgeons known to him personally, with Sutherland embodying both their strengths and weaknesses. Perhaps the most notable attribute of the fictitious Dr. Vrain is his total, and no doubt indispensable, commitment to and absorption in his skill. One of the film's advisors was Dr. Denton Cooley, a pioneering Dallas Surgeon; under whom Sutherland studied, and seems to have managed to portray with utter fidelity as the leading character. Cooley was the first surgeon to use an artificial heart in a patient with an irreparable heart. He was professionally reprimanded for doing it with¬out approval and so started his own hospital, The Texas Heart Institute. The film very loosely follows this little known event, and it is worth seeing if only for the strength of Sutherland's portrayal, no less than its high production values and the assured performances of the entire cast. This was a Canadian production. For some reason it was never transcribed to DVD in Canada, although versions are available from the Czech Republic, Germany, even Greece. I have a gradually deteriorating VHS tape, which will no doubt wear out in the watching of it. The vagaries of licensing agreements seem to have claimed yet another creative victim.
    7view_and_review

    Believable Blend of Science and Fiction

    I think the most attractive sci-fi movies are those that are closer to truth than fiction. I remember when Jurassic Park came out in 1993 (I see you Jeff Goldblum) it was such a hot topic. In fact, even though I was only a teenager, I don't think I'd ever heard the term DNA before. Jurassic Park popularized the three letter acronym and made us all believe that it may even be possible to revive a long dead species.

    Threshold has a similar believability. Doctor Vrain (Donald Sutherland) is the world's preeminent heart surgeon. He has performed such cutting edge heart surgeries they could be considered miracles. But there are conditions he can't even fix.

    Dr. Aldo Gehring (Jeff Goldblum) is a biologist that believes he can create an artificial heart. As he put it, man didn't fly by mimicking a bird, they flew by creating a machine different than a bird. So trying to mimic a heart is similarly futile. Dr. Aldo invented a heart with a tiny steam engine that uses just a drop of water that it constantly recycles to drive it. And instead of pumping blood as a normal heart would by contracting and expanding, it uses a vortex action to pump blood throughout the body.

    Threshold gives us that perfectly believable blend of science and fiction. It gives us that with the drama of a hospital movie/show that so many of us love. In the end, we all want to see lives saved because it gives us hope. And maybe that's what the true appeal of Threshold is--that it instills hope.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Donald Sutherland and Jeff Goldblum previously appeared in L'Invasion des profanateurs (1978).
    • Quotes

      Dr. Thomas Vrain: Carol? Carol? You're doing fine, you know that? You're doing just fine.

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    FAQ15

    • How long is Threshold?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 19, 1981 (Canada)
    • Country of origin
      • Canada
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Impulsions
    • Filming locations
      • Ottawa, Ontario, Canada(on location)
    • Production companies
      • Canada Permanent Trust Company
      • Paragon Motion Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • CA$5,700,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 37 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono

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